The Russian Civil War (1917-1922) was the multi-sided conflict after the Bolshevik Revolution in which Lenin's Red Army defeated the White Army (monarchists, liberals, anti-Bolshevik socialists) and foreign Allied intervention, securing communist control of Russia.
The Russian Civil War was the violent follow-up to the Bolshevik takeover of October 1917. Seizing the government was the easy part. Holding the entire former Russian Empire was not. From 1917 to 1922, the Bolshevik Red Army fought a loose coalition of enemies called the White Army, which included monarchists who wanted the tsar back, liberals who wanted the Provisional Government back, and socialists who hated Lenin's one-party rule. The Whites agreed on almost nothing except opposing the Bolsheviks, and that disunity helped sink them.
The war also went international. Britain, France, the U.S., and Japan sent troops to support anti-Bolshevik forces, partly to reopen an eastern front against Germany and partly out of fear of spreading communism. The intervention failed, and the Bolsheviks won. To win, Lenin imposed War Communism, seizing grain from peasants and nationalizing industry, which kept the Red Army fed but wrecked the economy and alienated the peasantry. By 1922 the Bolsheviks controlled the country and founded the Soviet Union, the regime based on Marxist-Leninist theory that the CED says emerged from the Revolution.
This term lives in Unit 8: 20th-Century Global Conflicts, mainly Topic 8.3 (The Russian Revolution and Its Effects) under learning objective 8.3.A, which asks you to explain the causes and effects of the Russian Revolution. The CED is explicit that the Bolshevik takeover "prompted a protracted civil war between communist forces and their opponents," so the civil war IS one of the tested effects, not background trivia. It also feeds Topic 8.11 and 8.11.A on how ideological beliefs reshaped the relationship between the individual and the state. War Communism is a textbook case of the state claiming total control over individual economic life in the name of ideology. Bigger picture, the Red victory created the communist pole of the ideological battles (communism vs. fascism vs. liberal democracy) that drive the rest of Unit 8 and set up the Cold War polarization in KC-4.1.
Keep studying AP Euro Unit 8
Bolshevik Revolution (Unit 8)
These are cause and effect. The October 1917 revolution put Lenin in power in Petrograd, but the civil war is what made that power stick across all of Russia. The exam loves this sequencing, so keep the order straight.
War Communism (Unit 8)
This was the Bolsheviks' wartime economic policy of grain requisitioning and nationalized industry. It won the war but starved the countryside, which is why Lenin had to retreat to the more market-friendly New Economic Policy afterward.
White Army (Unit 8)
The Whites were the Bolsheviks' opponents, but calling them an 'army' oversells their unity. Monarchists, liberals, and rival socialists couldn't agree on what Russia should become, only on what it shouldn't, and that's a big reason the Reds won.
Alexander Kerensky (Unit 8)
Kerensky led the Provisional Government the Bolsheviks overthrew. His failure to leave World War I or fix land distribution explains why so many Russians tolerated the Bolsheviks during the civil war rather than fighting for the old order.
Multiple-choice questions on this term tend to hit three angles. First, the economic consequences of War Communism, especially how grain requisitioning damaged the Bolsheviks' relationship with the peasantry. Second, why the civil war became international, with Allied intervention (1918-1920) failing to topple the Bolsheviks. Third, the war as an effect of the Russian Revolution under 8.3.A. No released FRQ has used the term verbatim, but it's strong evidence in essays about the effects of World War I, the rise of ideological extremism, or changing state power over individuals (8.11.A). Don't just narrate battles. The exam wants you to explain causes (Bolshevik takeover, foreign fear of communism), effects (Soviet state, economic collapse, NEP), and connections to the broader interwar ideological landscape.
The Russian Revolution refers to the 1917 upheavals, the February Revolution that toppled the tsar and the October Bolshevik Revolution that toppled the Provisional Government. The Russian Civil War is what came next, the 1917-1922 fight to determine whether the Bolsheviks would actually keep power. Think of the revolution as seizing the building and the civil war as defending it. On the AP exam, the civil war is listed as an effect of the revolution, so mixing them up muddles your causation.
The Russian Civil War (1917-1922) was fought between the Bolshevik Red Army and the White Army, a disunited coalition of monarchists, liberals, and anti-Bolshevik socialists.
The CED frames the civil war as a direct effect of the Bolshevik Revolution, so use it as evidence when explaining the consequences of 1917 under LO 8.3.A.
War Communism kept the Red Army supplied through grain requisitioning and nationalization, but it devastated the economy and turned the peasantry against the Bolsheviks.
Allied intervention by Britain, France, the U.S., and Japan internationalized the war but failed to defeat the Bolsheviks, deepening Soviet distrust of the West.
The Red victory produced the Soviet Union, a state built on Marxist-Leninist ideology, establishing the communist pole in the interwar ideological conflicts that dominate Unit 8.
White disunity, Red control of the industrial center, and Trotsky's organized Red Army explain the Bolshevik victory better than any single battle.
It was the 1917-1922 conflict after the Bolshevik Revolution in which Lenin's Red Army defeated the White Army and foreign intervention forces, securing communist control and leading to the founding of the Soviet Union in 1922.
No. The Russian Revolution refers to the two 1917 upheavals (February and October), while the civil war was the multi-year fight afterward over whether the Bolsheviks would keep power. The CED treats the civil war as an effect of the revolution.
No. Britain, France, the U.S., and Japan intervened from roughly 1918 to 1920 to support anti-Bolshevik forces, but the intervention was too small, too divided, and too unpopular to defeat the Reds. It mainly fueled long-term Soviet hostility toward the West.
The Reds held the industrial heartland and rail hubs around Moscow and Petrograd, had a unified ideology and Trotsky's disciplined Red Army, and used War Communism to supply troops. The Whites were geographically scattered and agreed on nothing except opposing the Bolsheviks.
War Communism was the Bolsheviks' wartime policy of seizing peasant grain and nationalizing industry to feed and supply the Red Army. It helped win the war but caused economic collapse and peasant revolts, forcing Lenin to adopt the New Economic Policy in 1921.